Tuesday: Chance of showers. Highs in the mid-90s. Lows in the mid- to upper 70s. Chance of rain 40 percent.

Tomorrow's weather column by WKRG's Jonathan Owens:

Another Tropical Depression could form in east of the Lesser Antilles within the next 24 hours. If a depression forms from this area of thunderstorm activity, computer modeling is currently taking it towards the Bahamas, and not towards the Gulf.

Tomorrow is the first day of August, and we are already up to the letter “E” in the hurricane season. Activity typically begins to increase during the month of August, peaking in mid-September. However, last year there were 19 named storms, almost none of which significantly impacted the U.S.

Showers and thunderstorms will begin to show up on radar screens each day around lunchtime, and persist through the early evening hours. Locally heavy rain and frequent lightning, the typical summertime Gulf Coast threats, will continue to be the main concern.

Other than that, the sky will be partly to occasionally mostly cloudy, and hot afternoon highs well into the 90s can be expected in the rain-free areas.